Gin Magazine

Cooper King becomes England’s first producer of carbon-negative gins

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Yorkshire’s Cooper King Distillery has become the first in England to produce carbon-negative gins.

The award-winning distiller’s Dry and Herb Gins are now classed as carbon negative, meaning that for every bottle of spirit produced, more carbon is removed from the atmosphere than is emitted.

To achieve this status, Cooper King has done as much as possible to reduce the carbon footprint of the gins. It has then offset the remainder of the emissions, plus a further 1kg of CO2 equivalent per bottle, through high-impact verified carbon credits, which support greenhouse gas emission reduction schemes elsewhere.

It comes after Scotland’s Arbikie Distillery launched its groundbrea­king carbonnega­tive gin, Nàdar, in February 2020.

In addition to carbon offsetting, Cooper

King supports the planting of one square metre of native UK woodland for each bottle of gin made, through a partnershi­p with the Yorkshire Dales Millennium Trust.

Cooper King’s determinat­ion to make its gins carbon negative came after an analysis of production and distributi­on revealed the true extent of their carbon footprint. Distillery co-founder Chris Jaume said: “We believe that drinking good spirits needn’t cost the Earth. After a year’s worth of hard work, and despite a pandemic, we’re delighted that we’ve been able to achieve carbon-negative status for our two core products.

“Reaching this milestone is a significan­t step in our plan to become a carbonnega­tive distillery. We value people, planet and prosperity, and through sharing our findings in our publicly available Carbon Report we hope to inspire others to make a positive difference.”

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